Saturday, January 12, 2013

Links

Plan for corporate India , by C P Chandrashekhar in Frontline

Investment climate may improve moderately in FY 2013: Survey in ET

Hawking the Deficit by C P Chandrashekhar and Jayati Ghosh in Macroscan

India's Growth Story: A Comparative View by C P Chandrashekhar and Jayati Ghosh in Macroscan

Why do people think economists are charlatans by Noah Smith on his blog, based on this paper. The graph here highlighting the disconnect between the general public and the economists (via the Economist) is also very funny. Note particularly the 100% agreement across economists of the hardness of predicting stock prices.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Wikileaks: The source of the scoops

Glenn Greenwald notes that nearly half of NYT's issues in 2011 relied on Wikileaks. For this service to journalism, Wikileaks is being investigated by a secret grand jury in the US.

The whole article by Greenwald is worth reading.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Cash transfers and UID

An important analysis and statement on cash transfers and UID.

The Seema Azad and the Vishwa Vijay case

On the 8th of June 2012 a court in Allahabad, pronounced life imprisonment to 36 year old Seema Azad, writer and editor of Dastak (a monthly magazine) and the Organising Secretary of the PUCL for alleged Maoist support (a la Binayak Sen). A critique on the PUCL website.

Here is a old media report on the case.
 
From The Hoot:
"The duo [she and her husband] were arrested shortly after Seema wrote against Ganga Expressway Plan, a project that would have displaced many farmers and also highlighted arbitrary arrests of Muslim youth by the Special Task Force in Azamgarh."

Saturday, January 5, 2013

Links

India undercounts its poor by Himashu

" ... has provided ample evidence of the significant impact of such minimal interventions (MDM expenses aggregated less than Rs 10,000 crore in 2009-10) have on poverty reduction."

Inequality Matters by Radhicka Kapoor

"Planning Commission estimates indicate that the ratio of per capita income between the top 15% and bottom 15% of the population has risen from 3.9 in 2004-05 to 5.8 in 2009-10 in rural areas. In urban areas, the ratio has gone up from 6.4 to 7.8, indicating that not only the inequality between the two groups is on the rise but also that the benefits of economic growth have not trickled down to those at the bottom of the distribution."


Electricity costs in Delhi

EPW has an article on the role of deregulation in the increase of power costs in Delhi. The whole article is worth a read, but here are the points which I got from it:

  • The privatization has put them outside the ambit of RTI and CAG.[1]
  • The higher costs are due to cost of power puchased[2]
  • Costs increased due to deregulation in electricity market, because of opaque short-term puchases and discretionary trading of electricity. [3]
  • The discoms have no incentive to reduce costs on purchases since it is, by regulation, directly passed through to customers. [4]
  • Many of the unregulated merchant traders in electricity have been guaranteed state-granted captive coal blocks. [5]
  • Hence, the customer are paying for not only discom's profits but also profits of merchant trading companies. [6]
***********   Notes   *************
 Article is "Pricing Electricity in Delhi" by Kannan Kasturi, EPW, Jan 5, 2013
  1. "the utilities have gone to court against attempts to bring them under the ambit of the Right to Information (RTI) Act while the state government itself has been reluctant to recommend a Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) audit of their accounts despite recommendations from the regulator."
    (Ramachandran, Smriti Kak (2012): “RWAs Want
    CAG Audit of Discoms’ Accounts” ) link 
  2. "It appears that DERC raised tariffs both times in response to a single factor deemed to be outside the control of the discoms – the increase in the cost of power purchased by them."
  3. "Power was allocated and its cost set by the government; the cost of power was considered a pass-through as far as the operations of the distribution utilities were concerned.  Over the years, significant changes have occurred in the electricity genera- tion and trading business with private producers, traders and exchanges coming into play with merchant power. Trading in electricity has become an important part of the operations of a distribution utility, especially one servicing a metro- politan area, and involves significant discretionary spending and sales. "
  4. "...considering that the cost of power is a pass-through cost as far as the utilities are concerned and in no way affects their profits."  
  5. A few examples include Jindal Power, GMR and Lanco Infratech. (Noor Mohammed, "Jindal Power ignores coal min directive on merchant sale of power", Financial Express, Jul 30, 2012)
  6. "The larger problem however lies in the unregulated electricity market. Delhi’s consumers are paying not only for the regulated guaranteed profits of the state-owned generation and transmis- sion companies and private distribution companies, but also for the unregulated profiteering of the merchant producers and other market players."

Blogging resumed, perhaps

I might be resuming posting on this blog after a long hiatus.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

On rural health care

In response to an article by Arvind Panagriha in Economic Times discussed on another blog.

I would like to throw out a different way of thinking about this. My point is that this issue has nothing to do with “socialized medicine”. Let me elaborate.

Panagriha’s main contention is:
…it is time to accept the fact that the government has at best limited capability to deliver health services and that a radical shift in strategy that gives the poor greater opportunity to choose between private and public providers is needed.


(i) Number of doctors:
He further makes a point:
With a population of 1.1 billion, this implies approximately 1,700 people per doctor. In comparison, there are just 400 people per doctor in the United States and 220 in Israel.

Why compare to US and Israel? Considering they are one of the richest in the world.

Why not compare to Cuba, a much poorer country? And a much more “socialist” country to boot. Cuba has higher proportion than both US and Israel (in fact one of the highest in the world).

(ii) India actually has one of the lowest spending on health in the world (proportional to total govt. spending) (3% of total expenditure). Compare this with 19% for US, 12% for Israel, 11% for Cuba and 5% for Vietnam. The private spending (of an individual) on health is 5 times the govt. expenditure. In this sense, India has one of the most privatized health care system in the world.

If you compare apples with oranges, you’ll get absurd results.

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Self-Defence

These words by Bertrand Russell are uncannily true and hence, very funny:

The next kind of war to be considered is the war of self-defence. This kind of war is almost universally admitted to be justifiable, and is condemned only by Christ and Tolstoy. The justification of wars of self-defence is very convenient, since so far as I know there has never yet been a war which was not one of self-defence.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Bhopal on KBCS

In December 1984, one of the worst industrial disasters in modern times occurred in Bhopal, India, killing tens of thousands of people. The survivors are still seeking justice, more than 23 years later. Aquene Freechild works with the International Campaign for Justice in Bhopal and the Dow Accountability Network. She was in Seattle recently to talk about the effects of deadly chemicals in Bhopal and the United States to an audience of volunteers with AID and Asha among others. This is a short, 3 min edited version of the interview.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

It would be funny if it weren't so sad

From Democracy Now!

Majeed al-Alawi: “Secretary of Defense thank you very much for the excellent speech. I was wondering whether you think the Israeli nuclear weapon is a threat to regional security or not?”

Robert Gates: “No, I do not.”

The statement by Gates was greeted by laughter from a room filled with government officials from Middle Eastern countries.


Just the right response to this nonsense.

Sunday, December 9, 2007

Indo-US nuclear deal and Iran

Here's one of my letters published in Eat the State!, a local newspaper.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Allan Nairn on Guatemala

The courageous Allan Nairn calling for Elliot Abrams to be tried for crimes against humanity.

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Invasion Newspeak

See this: INVASION - A COMPARISON OF SOVIET AND WESTERN MEDIA PERFORMANCE, a comparison of Soviet and American invasion newspeak.

Nikolai Lanine examines Soviet propaganda during Afghanistan war. Change a few names and lo' and behold! You get the American propaganda during Iraq war!

One of the snippets which would resonate with events today:

n 1988, Pravda reported that Afghan president Najibula had criticised this ”interference in the internal affairs of Afghanistan”. (Pravda, February 9, 1988) The newspaper failed to mention that the Soviet Union was itself guilty of illegal external “interference“. Instead, journalists blamed the West for ”pouring oil onto the fire of the Afghan conflict”. (Pravda, February 22, 1987) Ignoring the fact that much of the fighting in Afghanistan was in +response+ to the Soviet occupation, the media were also heavily critical of Iran and Pakistan.

Iran was criticised for “supporting the armed Islamic opposition” and for “sending its political emissaries and agents into the territory of Afghanistan”. (Spolnikov, 1990, pp.104-105) Russian journalist Andrei Greshnov, who worked as a TASS correspondent in Afghanistan for eight years in the 1980s, describes in his book “Afghanistan: Hostages of Time” (2006) how for several years, starting in the early 1980s, he was tasked with collecting information on Iranian Shia infiltration across the Afghan border near Herat. Iranian influence was very tangible in Western Afghanistan and widely confirmed by the testimony of Soviet soldiers interviewed (by Lanine) over the last 20 years.

George Galloway's wit

George Galloway is a colourful and courageous anti-war MP in Britain who incidentally also hosts a radio show. He's full of the gift of the gab. Here's on of his phrases commenting on a former communist:

John was all for the men behind the wire.
Now he wants to make the wire ever higher.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

On Annapolis

Chomsky on Israel/Palestine and Annapolis.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Milton Friedman and Chile

One of the things for which Milton Friedman is both reviled and hailed is his connection with the "Miracle of Chile".

There are at least two questions:
a) What happenned in Chile and was it a "miracle"?
b) Why did Friedman consider it a "miracle"?

Reality


Let's try to lay out what happenned in Chile. The relevant time period is 1973-late 80s, the reign of Augusto Pinochet.

Politics


In 1970, a democratic socialist politician, Salvador Allende came to power in the Presidential election. He tried to carry out moderate reforms, including minor land reform. Unfortunately, as is the norm in Latin America, this means the President wasn't going to last very long. The CIA immediately started efforts to destabilize the political and economic structure. Nixon famously declared "make the economy scream". On September 11, 1973, what is known as the "first 9/11" in Latin America, Augusto Pinochet overthrew Allende in a coup.

The Pinochet regime is well known for its brutal suppression of labour unions, dissidents and all kinds of torture, massacres and other familiar stuff in Latin America. But it was also notable for its economic policies.

Economics


Milton Friedman was in Chile in the initial period and from what I can see, his only direct involvement was giving a speech laying out the case for neoliberal reforms.

However his ideas of economic policy were followed quite widely by a group of economists known as the "Chicago Boys", alumni of the University of Chicago, where Friedman taught. The strategies included large scale "privatization" of industries, cutting taxes, privatizing Social Security and many other familiar features of the neoliberal package.

Performance


Amartya Sen, in his book, Hunger and Public Action, examines the economic performance of Chile. From a survey of the literature in the field, he finds:

"This so-called "monetarist experiment"... has been the the object of much controversy, but few have claimed it to be a sucess. The failure of the monetarist experiment to lead to a sustained and broad-based increase in economic prosperity is apparent...The most conspicuous feature of the post-1973 period is that of considerable instability...and no firm and consistent upward trend (to say the least) in the conventional indicators of economic prosperity."

From his data, the per capita GDP fell 20% from 1973-85, real wages declined by approximately the same amount and unemployment rate increased from 4% to 14%.

On the social side, the picture is a little more complex. There has been an undeniable reduction in infant mortality rate (IMR) from 1973-85 from 82 per thousand to 19 per thousand. The life expectancy at birth also increased from 64.8 to 68.3. But life expectancy at age 1 (by definition, less sensitive to IMR) stagnated at 68.6 years. He finds that:

"Favourable IMR trends have not been reflective of a corresponding general improvement in living conditions".

Also, he notes that "there's little disagreement as to what caused the observed improvements in the area of child health and nutrition". Chile had a very long tradition of public action in nutritional and health programs for children, which played the major role in observed trends in IMR.

Friedman's view


Friedman did consider the Chilean economy to have performed well.

"Oh, very well. Extremely well. The Chilean economy did very well, but more important, in the end the central government, the military junta, was replaced by a democratic society. So the really important thing about the Chilean business is that free markets did work their way in bringing about a free society."

A few comments about that. People can judge for themselves whether it did perform well. As to the second aspect, Friedman displays an extraordinary lack of historical knowledge. Even it Latin America, it was pretty evident, the role of military and business interests in sustaining dictatorial governments. These famous lines come from one of the most decorated American generals in history, Smedley Butler, in his book War is a Racket. He talks about his activities in Latin America in the first half of the 20th century:

"I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism. I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902-1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916. I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903. In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested. Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents."

Friedman has held that in fact, this picture is misleading because the state in intertwined with the Big Business (which is true) and thus he held that privatizing and minimizing the state would help things along. Did that happen in Chile? From what I can make out (I need to do more research on this), most of the newly privatized business went to Pinochet's cronies and was just taking things out from the public realm, where it had, however small, a measure of control by the public, into the hands of cronies of the barbaric dictator.